Macadamia Coconut Burfi (Vegan)
Like every year,
we gathered this year too at my brother’s to welcome Ganpati on Ganesh
Chaturthi. This year was special as Aai is here with us in Melbourne.
Lord Lambodar, the
legendary foodie was treated to a sumptuous and delicious meal of steamed modaks,
jalebis, gulab jamuns, pooris, tomato saar, matki cha bhat (moth beans pulao)
pudina chutney, sundal, lagnatli batatayachi bhaji and patta pakoris made out
of Commelina benghalensis, a succulent weed.
True to her nature
and nurture, Aai had ventured out in her son’s garden in Melbourne to discover
an edible weed found in India as well, called Kena (Commelina benghalensis).
Remind me to tell you about the weed and the pakoris made out of it.
To come back to
the Ganpati Pooja, with the naivedya offered, the family and friends gathered
for the arati at the beautifully decorated altar where Ganpati was installed.
The group stood in
respectful silence counting the imperceptible beats of the invisible conductor
as we all do before starting an arati- when my nephew broke into a very joyous
“Happy Birthday to you” – and we burst out laughing. Then, as if on cue - yet
totally unprompted, we all spontaneously joined in for a bar or two before
segueing into the traditional Ganpati arati…
Was it out of
sheer force of habit, conditioned by the bonhomie of friends and family, the
festive atmosphere and the enticing aroma of all the special foods?
Or a result of the
sense of familiarity we feel for the loveable deity?
Was it improper of
us to have made light of this?
Probably not –
come on, this is our Australian Ganpati - a very familiar, much loved bloke.
He's very much a part of us, inside us, around us - by that token he's
Australian.
As Australian as
the Australian Macadamia Coconut Burfi I had made for him earlier that day.
Surely he has the
slightly cheeky Aussie sense of humour as well.
Macadamia Coconut
Burfi (Vegan)
Macadamia nuts are
indigenous to Australia. The meat has very high fat content, making the nuts very
creamy and an ideal substitute for mawa or khoya.
Ingredients
¾ cup powdered
macadamia nuts (or cashew nuts)
1 ½ cups grated
fresh coconut
1 ½ cups sugar
2 tbsp thick
coconut milk (optional)
¾ tsp cardamom
powder
A pinch of saffron
A little oil to
grease the tray
Method
Grease a tray or
thali in readiness for the burfi mixture.
Pour the sugar in
a wide, heavy bottomed pan and add just enough water to cover it. Switch on the
heat and bring this mixture to a boil. Once it reaches a one-string
consistency, add the grated coconut and powdered macadamia nuts and the coconut
milk. Keep stirring the mixture continuously, scraping the bottom as well. When
it starts to thicken add the cardamom and saffron.
Keep stirring
until the mixture begins to leave the sides of the pan. This is a crucial few minutes when you have
to make a decision to stop or continue. Too much cooking and the mixture will
become brittle in no time.
The mixture needs
to be thick, but moist. Look out for the sides of the pan, if they look
encrusted and white with the candied sugar, remove the pan from heat and
immediately pour the mass into the greased tray.
Let me not scare
you off - if you don't want to risk the utter crumbling of the burfi mixture by
keeping it too long on the heat, you can remove it earlier. Then, you can add a
few tablespoons of icing sugar or powdered sugar and mix well.
The icing sugar or
powdered sugar thickens the mixture and the mixing/stirring dries it to the
desired consistency. The only flip side of adding sugar in the end is the burfi
may become a little extra sweet.
Spread evenly and
flatten quickly with a palette knife or spatula.
Score square or
diamond shapes into the patted mixture before it cools completely.
Allow the mixture
to set before cutting the burfis out.